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Britain in the XVIII and XIX centuries
1.
Britain in theXVIII and XIX
centuries
2. Queen Anne (1665 / 1702 – 1714), the last of the Stuarts
In 1707, during the reignof Queen Anne, the
union of England and
Scotland was made
official.
Scotland gave up its
Parliament but kept its
own legal system and
the Presbyterian
Church. The united
country got a new name
of Great Britain.
3.
In 1801 the Act ofUnion added
Ireland, and the
United Kingdon of
Great Britain and
Ireland was created
4. House of Hanover (1714 – 1901)
George I(1660 /
1714 –
1727)
Victoria
(1819 /
1837 –
1901)
In 1714 the royal House
of Hanover succeeded
to the British throne.
The dynasty of German
origin, descended from
George I, provided
Britain with six monarchs
during the XVIII and XIX
centuries, the most wellknown being Queen
Victoria.
5. Robert Walpole – the first British Prime Minister
6.
In the XVIII centuryEngland became the
leading military
power in Europe.
British victories in the
wars against France
and Spain led to
establishing its
commercial and
colonial supremacy
in the world.
7. The British Empire
Britain became thelargest empire in
history. It gained
large territories in
North America
(including future
Canada and the
United States), Asia
(including the whole
of India), Africa and
Australia.
8.
As the Britishpopulation grew
rapidly, it naturally led
to the increase of
emigration to
colonies. Many
Englishmen settled in
America, Asia,
Australia and Africa. It
was then that the
English language
began to acquire its
international status.
9. Britain in the Napoleonic Wars
Horatio Nelson(1758 – 1805)
In 1805 one of the
greatest sea victories
in English history took
place at Trafalgar,
when Admiral Nelson
defeated a combined
French and Spanish
fleet near Gibralter
Trafalgar
Square,
London
10. Britain in the Napoleonic Wars
Duke of Wellington became the leadingBritish general after he defeated Napoleon
at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815
11.
The most seriousmilitary defeat came
to Britain in the war
with its thirteen
American colonies
in the 1770s. After
several years of war
Britain had to
acknowledge the
independence of
the United States.
12. The Industrial Revolution
Great Britain rapidlygrew into a leading
capitalist country. It
went through the
industrial revolution
in the XVIII century,
and became the
richest country of
the world in the XIX
century.
13.
Coal mining andiron
manufacturing
were the most
important branches
of industry in the
XIX century
14. The growth of industrial towns
The Britishpopulation
shifted from
the
countryside
to towns
where work
was available
1701
1901
15. The life of the poor
Great wealth andpower was in the
hands of the financial
bourgeoisie and
landed aristocracy.
At the same time the
working class lived in
terrible poverty.
Demonstrations and
strikes became
common in the XIX
century
16. Luddites – destroyers of the looms
Some workers blamedtheir poor life on the
introduction of
machines and started
destroying them. The
movement became
known as Luddism
(named after the
leader of the Luddites
Ned Lud)
17. The Enlightenment Era
The XVIII century isknown in European
history as the
Enlightenment epoch.
The Enlighteners
believed in the common
sense and education
as the means to
enlighten people, to help
them see the roots of
evil and the way of
social reformation.
18. British literature of the Enlightenment Age
The Enlighteners spread their ideasthrough literature. The leading genre of
the period was a novel, realistic and
moralizing.
Daniel Defoe
Jonathan Swift
Henry Fielding
19. The age of science and technology
In 1765James
Watt
produced
the steam
engine
20. The First British Railway
The first railwaylocomotive,
constructed by
George Stephenson
(1814)
The opening of the first
railway line Stockton –
Darlington (1825)
21. The British science of the XIX century
MichaelFaraday, the
founder of
the
electromagnetism
theory
James Joule,
a physicist
who studied
the problems
of electricity
Charles Darwin, the
discoverer of the
principle of natural
selection and theory of
evolution
22. The Age of Romanticism in revolt against the “common sense”
WilliamWordsworth
Samuel
Taylor
Coleridge
George
Gordon
Byron
John
Keats
Percy
Bysshe
Shelley
Walter
Scott
23. The age of classical realism in literature
CharlesDickens
William
Makepeace
Thackeray
The Bronte
Sisters
24. Robert Adam and his neoclassical architecture
Old College,Edinburgh
Charlotte Square, Edinburgh
25. John Nash and his architecture
RoyalPavilion,
Brighton
All Souls, London
Terrace in Regent’s Park, London
26. Westminster Palace in neo-Gothic style
27. The British Painting
In the XVIII centurya distinctive British
style of painting
began to appear. In
1768 the Academy
of Fine Arts
appeared in
London.
28. William Hogarth. Self-Portrait
29. William Hogarth. A Distressed Poet
30. W.Hogarth. Falstaff Examining His Recruits
31. William Hogarth. The Bench
32. Joshua Reynolds. Self-Portrait
33. J.Reynolds. Portrait of Mrs. Stanhope
34. J.Reynolds. Portrait of Mrs. Beresford
35. J.Reynolds. Lady Sunderlin
36. Thomas Gainsborough. Self-Portrait
37. T.Gainsborough. Portrait of a Lady in Blue
38. T.Gainsborough. Conversation in a Park
39. T.Gainsborough. Cottage Girl with Dog and Pitcher
40. Portrait of Sarah Siddons
by Joshua Reynoldsby Thomas Gainsborough